When School Wasn’t “School”: Developing Culturally Responsive Practice during the COVID-19 Lockdowns
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Janet: Students aren’t weird robots that you just put numbers into to hit the standard.
Samantha: They escort that student to the bathroom…It’s tough for them [students] “cause they feel like they’re in a prison”.
Jennifer: …treating them like animals, or [like] they should be disciplined in a different way. “I don’t believe that; I believe that we’re working with human beings”.
2. Literature Review
2.1. Culturally Responsive Pedagogy and the Contrivance of “School”
2.2. CRP Making It “Equal” for Everyone
2.3. What Is Stopping the “Equality”?
3. Methods
3.1. Methodology and Guiding Theories
3.2. Site and Participants
3.3. Procedures
3.4. HiTCRiT Lesson Plan
3.5. Interviews
3.6. Positionality
3.7. Data Analysis
3.8. Credibility
4. Findings/Discussion
4.1. The Curse of Colleagues
They will always be like, “Oh we can never tell you what to teach”, but it’s implied that ‘we are telling you what to teach’…and that’s just an obstacle in that…if I don’t agree with that, I can teach something else, but I’m also on my own little island.
When I go home, I’m like did I really say that, do I actually think that? It’s just a weird like hive mind that kind of happens, and I just don’t even realize that I’ve adopted that weird mentality about my kids. It’s just it’s so weird to not think what everyone around you thinks, if everyone is thinking that.
4.2. Cultures of Control
4.3. Learning Normal Was the Problem All Along
5. Conclusions
Limitations and Implications
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. HiTCRiT Lesson Template
Text | |
The texts, materials, or activity is used in teaching this content | What features of this text/material/activity make it a good choice for learning the content? Are they/it chosen with the intent to connect to the classroom community and honor student socio-emotional needs? Are How do they/does it fit with the style of instruction or teaching in your class? |
Style | |
The ways of interacting that would be familiar to particular communities | How will the instruction in this lesson be structured? Why does this structure make sense for its content and objectives? What classroom practices or activities are tailored with the students in mind? In what ways are your practices guided by who your students are and honor ways of interacting familiar to their communities? |
Socio-Emotional Considerations | |
My instruction of this lesson is attuned to students’ emotions and identities in this way: | How does this lesson value or access the funds of knowledge your students bring to the classroom? What opportunities does the lesson provide for student agency or spaces does it create for student voice? How does the lesson offer connection between school and your students’ home life? |
Institutional Bridge | |
Focus Standard(s): 1. 2. Other standards addressed: 1. 2. | On what specific, required content is this lesson focused? What other content is related to this topic? Will be reviewed in teaching it? Is there related knowledge students need to grasp the new content? How will you assess students’ understanding of the content? |
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Category Code: Enacting/Understanding CRP | |
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Initial Code (Examples) | Sub-Category Codes |
“Showing skepticism of ‘standard language’” “Identifying white gaze in curriculum” | Culture Competence |
“Acknowledging desire to change to facilitator role” “Positioning students as teachers” “Validating student language” | Co-constructed learning |
“Learning about students” “Creating relationships” | Student/teacher Relationships |
“Acknowledging systems of oppression to students” “Helping students see themselves in classroom/world” | Sociopolitical Consciousness |
“Conflating ‘academic language’ w/‘how to write’” | Academic Development |
First Lesson Plan: Style |
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How will the instruction in this lesson be structured? Why does this structure make sense for its content and objectives? |
Instruction will be structured in an “I do, we do, you do” format. Our unit has focused on argument, but this will be the first time so far that we’ve explicitly used the techniques that I’ll teach them to evaluate the arguments they’re hearing. |
What classroom practices or activities are tailored with the students in mind? |
The texts are both speeches given by high school students, both of which may be familiar to the students. Additionally, the topics |
Final Lesson Plan: Style |
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How will the instruction in this lesson be structured? Why does this structure make sense for its content and objectives? |
The core instruction is structured through the slideshow I created in which I use Screencastify to look for and analyze an author’s choices in a text. For obvious reasons, this makes a lot of sense for NTI. I think this is a good way to structure the instruction for this lesson particularly because I’m able to show the students where in the graphic novel I’m seeing the author make specific choices and then verbally process how those choices add deeper meaning and impact readers. |
What classroom practices or activities are tailored with the students in mind? |
The formative assessment I’m using for this lesson asks students to design a short comic themselves. I’ve allowed a lot of flexibility in this assignment and outlined that what I’m looking for is that they, as the author of their comic, can make one specific choice that will add deeper meaning for their readers. The students are then asked to describe their choice, why they made it, and what impact it had. |
I had the students in mind allowing them to get as creative as they wanted. |
First Lesson Plan: Style |
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Student Socratic seminar self-assessment/instructor assessment: Students will have a Socratic seminar about the required reading in the fictional text and student presentations about specific #BlackLivesMatter cases. Students will self-assess using the embedded form. The instructor will also use the same form to assess each student. |
Final Lesson Plan: Style |
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This lesson(s) gives students choice in which assignments they would like to complete. This lesson is asynchronous, allowing students to choose when they would like to complete the assignments within a range of dates. |
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First Lesson Plan: Style | Final Lesson Plan: Style |
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How will the instruction in this lesson be structured? Why does this structure make sense for its content and objectives? Students have a graphic organizer on their iPads with different persuasive techniques with boxes for them to type examples they glean from the speech as we watch it. Also, the speech will be paused periodically to allow students to write and discuss their observations of which persuasive techniques they believe Dr. King is using inhis speech. | How will the instruction in this lesson be structured? We only have a short amount of time together in video lessons, since students have other lessons to attend. We check in with each other and how we’re doing as we take role, I will briefly revisit the Harlem Renaissance information they’ve done work on to lend context today’s lesson, I will tell them what the lesson is focusing on, then we will get as far into the slideshow as we can together before our time runs out, then they will finish on their own. Why does this structure make sense for its content and objectives? The structure is meant to emulate a gradual release of responsibility, the I do, we do, you do-esque model. Though, the I do portion is significantly reduced considering the content. I don’t want to lead students into any one direction when interpreting the art pieces, I’ve selected for them. I want their opinions, free of teacher influence. After all, the objective is to have them communicate their observations and what aspects of the paintings led them to those conclusions, similar to citing textual evidence to support analysis of the text. |
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Share and Cite
Baize, J. When School Wasn’t “School”: Developing Culturally Responsive Practice during the COVID-19 Lockdowns. Educ. Sci. 2023, 13, 684. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13070684
Baize J. When School Wasn’t “School”: Developing Culturally Responsive Practice during the COVID-19 Lockdowns. Education Sciences. 2023; 13(7):684. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13070684
Chicago/Turabian StyleBaize, Jonathan. 2023. "When School Wasn’t “School”: Developing Culturally Responsive Practice during the COVID-19 Lockdowns" Education Sciences 13, no. 7: 684. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13070684
APA StyleBaize, J. (2023). When School Wasn’t “School”: Developing Culturally Responsive Practice during the COVID-19 Lockdowns. Education Sciences, 13(7), 684. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13070684